L10NSharp is a .NET localization library for Windows Forms applications. It collects strings which need localization when your application first runs and saves them in a translation memory file. It can also dynamically collect strings at runtime.
L10NSharp works with XLIFF files as translation memory.
L10NSharp is provided as a nuget package.
To use L10NSharp in your application, simply call the Create
method on LocalizationManager
,
passing the location of the translation memory files and some other information:
using (var lm = LocalizationManager.Create(lang, "SampleApp",
"SampleApp", productVersion, directoryOfInstalledXliffFiles, "MyCompany/L10NSharpSample",
icon, "[email protected]", "SampleApp")
{
// existing code to run the application
}
One of two conventions must be used to name xlf files (only the ones for requested languages
are loaded into memory, so we need the file names to tell us which ones to load).
By default, directoryOfInstalledFiles
contains files named Whatever.lang.xlf
; if
LocalizationManager.UseLanguageCodeFolders
is true, then they are in folders whose names
are the language tags. These names must match the target-language declared in the XLF
for lazy loading to work properly. If the target-language is a multi-part tag (like es-ES
),
the lang component in the file path may be either the full tag (Whatever.es-ES.xlf
or
es-ES/Whatever.xlf
) or its first component, the bare language tag (Whatever.es.xlf
or es/Whatever.xlf
).
If an exact match for the requested language is not available, L10NSharp will try to find the best available language. For example, if the client
requests es
but only Whatever.es-ES.xlf
is available, Whatever.es-ES.xlf
will be loaded automatically, and vice versa. However, if the client
requests es
and both Whatever.es-ES.xlf
and Whatever.es-MX.xlf
are available, or if no Whatever.es[-details].xlf
is available, a dialog will
inform the user that the selected language is not available and prompt the user to select from the available languages.
In general, L10NSharp is not written with thread safety in mind; callers should ensure
that only one thread at a time enters L10NSharp methods. There is one exception: we have
attempted to make the various varieties of GetString
thread-safe,.
To localize a Windows Forms form or control, simply add the L10NSharpExtender
. It will
automatically collect all the localizable strings on your form or control and its children.
L10NSharp provides a dialog for translating terms while running the application. The dialog can be launched by Alt-Shift-clicking a Windows Forms element.
The migration guide describes the necessary changes when upgrading to a higher major version.
Just download the repository and build the solution (L10NSharp.sln
).
The command line build command would look something like this:
dotnet build
We use NUnit to run our unit tests. NUnit is downloaded via NuGet. There may be a few tests that do not run, but all tests that run should pass.
The tests can be run from the command line like this:
dotnet test
It is also possible to run the tests from inside Visual Studio or Rider.
- Set an enviroment variable
LOCAL_NUGET_REPO
with the path to a folder on your computer (or local network) to publish locally-built packages - See these instructions to enable local package sources
build /t:pack
will pack nuget packages and publish them toLOCAL_NUGET_REPO
Further instructions at https://github.com/sillsdev/libpalaso/wiki/Developing-with-locally-modified-nuget-packages